1. Press your hotkey to bring up the Snapz palette. (the default is apple-shift-3)
2. Press apple-q.
3. There is no step 3!
I never quit it, myself. It uses practically no memory and it uses zero CPU when idle. If you're desperately low on memory, I guess it couldn't hurt to quit it.
1. Press your hotkey to bring up the Snapz palette. (the default is apple-shift-3)
2. Press apple-q.
3. There is no step 3!
I never quit it, myself. It uses practically no memory and it uses zero CPU when idle. If you're desperately low on memory, I guess it couldn't hurt to quit it.
I was just thinking about that today too! lol.
It seems odd to use cmd+q when the application name isn't in the menubar.
Comments
1. Press your hotkey to bring up the Snapz palette. (the default is apple-shift-3)
2. Press apple-q.
3. There is no step 3!
I never quit it, myself. It uses practically no memory and it uses zero CPU when idle. If you're desperately low on memory, I guess it couldn't hurt to quit it.
Originally posted by Brad
Simple:
1. Press your hotkey to bring up the Snapz palette. (the default is apple-shift-3)
2. Press apple-q.
3. There is no step 3!
I never quit it, myself. It uses practically no memory and it uses zero CPU when idle. If you're desperately low on memory, I guess it couldn't hurt to quit it.
I was just thinking about that today too! lol.
It seems odd to use cmd+q when the application name isn't in the menubar.
Oh well, it works! Thanks Brad!